S. Rodmond Smith

Samuel Rodmond Smith (April 20, 1841 – September 30, 1912) was a Congressional Medal of Honor recipient in the Union Army during the U.S. Civil War. He was an attorney by vocation and became Mayor of Miami near the end of his life.

Medal of Honor
The citation for Smith's Medal of Honor was for an act of bravery at Rowanty Creek, Va on Feb 5, 1865. It reads: "Swam the partly frozen creek under fire to establish a crossing." Smith swam the crossing with First Lieutenant David Eastburn Buckingham, who also earned the award. Smith and his regiment lost their leader as he was shot and carried to the rear shortly before they made their crossing. In an account of the events of that day, Smith said, "There was considerable floating ice in the stream," and, "The water proved to be over six feet deep."

Civilian life
After the Civil War, Smith worked for Farmer's Mutual Insurance Company. Smith authored a memoir of Judge Leonard Eugene Wales published by the Delaware Historical Society. He was appointed Clerk of the US Court for the District of Delaware in 1873, where he worked for 30 years. Smith authored a pamphlet named The reclamation of the Florida Everglades.

Smith owned a 20 Hp Maxwell Briscoe Touring Car, one of the few motor vehicles registered in South Florida in 1907. During his campaign for Miami Mayor, his opponents called him, 'Yankee' as a pejorative.

He died in Miami in shortly after resigning as the city's 5th Mayor. He willed a generous donation to the YMCA, the Women's Club and the Coconut Grove Library.